Raising bilingual-biliterate children in monolingual cultures/ Stephen J. Caldas.
Material type:
TextSeries: Bilingual education and bilingualism ; 57Publication details: Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, 2006.Description: xv, 231p.: ill.; 21 cmISBN: - 9781853598753
- DUCE P118.2.C35
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Books | DUCE LIBRARY Humanities: Shelf P95.45. B87 – PE1417. M45 | Humanities and Social Sciences | DUCE P118.2.C35 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 000000176506 |
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| DUCE P99.4.L72 Pragmatics/ | DUCE P118.2 .E4 Understanding second language acquisition | DUCE P118.2.B76 Understanding research n second language learning: a teacher's guide to sttstics and research design | DUCE P118.2.C35 Raising bilingual-biliterate children in monolingual cultures/ | DUCE P118.2.G74 Learning to read in a new language: making sense of words and worlds/ | DUCE P118.2.G74 Learning to read in a new language: making sense of words and worlds/ | DUCE P118.2.H359 Handbook of research in second language teaching and learning/ |
includes bibliographical references and index
This book is a case study carefully detailing the French/English bilingual and biliterate development of three children in one family beginning with their births and ending in late adolescence. The author and researcher is the children’s French/English bilingual American father, who was aided by his bilingual French Canadian wife (also the children’s mother). We reared our three children in two different cultures― essentially monolingual English-speaking Louisiana, and totally monolingual French-speaking Québec. The family spent academic years in Louisiana, and the summer months in Québec. Our strategy was to speak only French to our son and our identical twin daughters. We artificially orchestrated and manipulated both the strategies, and to the extent possible, even the children’s environments to ensure the success of our project. Additionally, I carefully documented our progress using a variety of research tools, including audio and videotape recordings, teacher and child surveys, interviews with teachers, field notes, psychological and diagnostic testing, and standardized assessment instruments.
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